One Year After Benghazi, No Arrests Made; CNN Largely Mum

By

Matt Hadro

September 12, 2013 - 6:52pm

On the one-year anniversary of the Benghazi attacks, only three CNN
shows bothered to hold the Obama administration accountable for not
having made any arrests of suspects. Hosts Jake Tapper and Erin Burnett,
and anchor Michael Holmes were the three CNN figures to point at the
administration for not having made any arrests.

For the rest of CNN's 18-hour news day, any mentions of Benghazi
ignored the lack of arrests and were mostly brief reports on Wednesday's
bombing of the Foreign Ministry building in the city and reminders that
it was the one-year anniversary of the attacks. Piers Morgan Live made no mention whatsoever of Benghazi.

On Wednesday's The Lead,
Jake Tapper rapped the administration for giving "contradictory, and as
we later learned, blatantly false explanations" in the days after the
attacks. He added that "Although several suspects in Libya have been
charged, no one is currently in custody. Four State Department officials
originally placed on administrative leave have returned to their jobs
with no other punishments."

Tapper then interviewed Pat Smith, mother of slain diplomat Sean Smith,
and allowed her to comment on President Obama's promise to serve
justice. Tapper brought up a suspect who CNN found and interviewed in
Benghazi:

"So Ahmed Abu Khattala is one of the chief suspects in the Benghazi
attacks, and nobody from the Libyan government or the United States
government has had a conversation with him. What's your response?"

This same suspect was mentioned by CNN's Arwa Damon who found and interviewed him. On the 12 p.m. ET Around the World,
anchor Michael Holmes found it "a little troubling" that Damon was
"able to find one of the people that authorities were looking for when
it came to the Benghazi attack, but nobody has been arrested."

Damon acknowledged, "That's right. And it's been a year." She continued:

"And to some degree, a lot of critics of the Obama administration will
say that this is completely inexcusable, especially given that the FBI
has named a prime suspect, Ahmed Abu Khattala, who is, yes, the
individual that we were able to meet with when we were in Benghazi back
in May. This is a man who is not even bothering to try to hide. He does
not feel as if anyone is going to be coming after him. He spoke to us
quite openly for a few hours. He denies any sort of direct involvement
in coordinating the attack, but does admit that he was on scene."

On Wednesday evening's OutFront, host Erin Burnett noted that
"it's a year later and there has not been a significant arrest" and
pointed to the administration. "A year later, justice promised, but this
issue still is haunting the Obama administration."

Burnett and correspondent John King explored Benghazi's ties to Obama's
foreign policy. "My question to you is how much has Benghazi and the
failure there hamstrung, put the President's hands tied behind his back,
around Syria?" Burnett asked. King admitted that it has poisoned the
public trust in Obama's foreign policy on Syria:

"People looked at Egypt. There was American diplomacy involved there.
They thought it was going to work out. What is it like today? It is
chaos. They look at Libya. Remember, he was criticized for leading from
behind, but then there was a new government. Gadhafi was gone. Everyone
thought wow, maybe this was going to be good. And then a year ago
tonight that optimism died, Erin, along with four Americans, and that
mood, that spirit that this region is just a mess impacts the President
when he tries to sell people that he can have an effective plan nearby
in Syria."

For the rest of CNN's coverage, however, there was no mention of the
administration's failure to make arrests a full year after the consulate
was attacked. Early Start co-host John Berman just said that indictments have reportedly been issued:

"The Washington Post cites counterterrorism officials who believe
terrorist groups targeted the consulate in advance of the attack. They
say numerous suspects involved in the Benghazi attack have been
identified and several sealed indictments have been issued in recent
months."

Anchor Carol Costello reported that "Last month the first criminal charges were filed against the suspects."

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